Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.

Taking its title from a line in Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem Jabberwocky, this sculpture is seen as an elegant and incongruous structure born out of and yet alien to the forest environment around it. Standing tall at close to four meters in height, the two wing or leaf-like forms, with their black mirrored front surfaces, appear to dissolve into the surrounding landscape, while from behind their back-face reveals a clear, flowing, golden filigree patterned form.